Word: us
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...foreign students, because it would show them not only the real friendliness of Americans, in which they can now hardly believe, but the practical foresight of the College organization and of the student body. The increase in enrollment of foreign students in successive years would very quickly reward us for these small considerations. T. L. HOOD
...Unsung." We are glad to learn that these reports are not correct, though we still question the advisability of distinguishing between men technically trained officers and untrained privates in awarding war credits; the University's system of treating all men returning from the service exactly alike appears to us the only wise course. The chancellor's statement follows...
...Those of us who are not Juniors are out of it, and sighs will burden the breeze as it wafts the languorous strains of the "shimmie" tunes from the Union to Sophomore ears. How to make our visitors realize that the Junior Class is not the only class in Harvard! But those of us who belong to the favored fold proudly ignore such envious murmuring. Tonight the Class of 1920 reviews its past splendor and its future glory, and it is well satisfied with its own company...
...which held beyond the walls of the lecture hall-was characteristic of him; many more famous masters of learning have sought it and failed. He was first and always our friend; kind, sympathetic, tolerant, never the teacher on a pedestal but always the helpful advisor. Mingling as one of us he pointed the way by his wider culture and greater experience to better effort and broader ideas. We knew him as infinitely patient in the classroom and in the little study in Gray's Hall, where he cheerfully devoted himself to the troubles we laid before him. He served Harvard...
What has been said concerning the Japanese students can be said with equal truth about the Siamese and Chinese. The Far East has sent many men to Harvard since the war closed European universities. Since the great barrier raised by the Bolsheviki at the Ural Mountains has bound us still more closely to these people, no such chance as this should be ignored to place relations upon the most cordial basis. The friendships formed in college today will develop into international friendships of tomorrow...